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Racism and geopolitics keep aid from Pakistan

September 3, 2010
| The floods in Pakistan have triggered a massive social crisis that will not be alleviated by policies being pursued by domestic and international elites says Snehal Shingavi.

15:06 minutes (13.82 MB)
Columnists

Haiti: A creditor, not a debtor

If we are to believe the G-7 finance ministers, Haiti is on its way to getting something it has deserved for a very long time: full "forgiveness" of its foreign debt. In Port-au-Prince, Haitian economist Camille Chalmers has been watching these developments with cautious optimism. Debt cancellation is a good start, he told Al Jazeera English, but "It's time to go much further. We have to talk about reparations and restitution for the devastating consequences of debt." In this telling, the whole idea that Haiti is a debtor needs to be abandoned. Haiti, he argues, is a creditor-and it is we, in the West, who are deeply in arrears.

Columnists

Forgive us, Haiti

The tragedy of the Haitian earthquake continues to unfold, with slow delivery of aid, the horrific number of amputations performed out of desperate medical necessity, more than a million homeless, perhaps 240,000 dead, hunger, dehydration, the emergence of infections and waterborne diseases, and the approach of the rainy season, which will be followed by the hurricane season. Haiti has suffered a massive blow, an earthquake for which its infrastructure was not prepared, after decades-no, centuries-of military and economic manipulation by foreign governments, most notably the United States and France.

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G8 meeting in Italy: Who will speak up for the world's poor?

How do we persuade Stephen Harper to do the right thing?

Next week our Prime Minister joins seven other leaders of the world’s richest nations at the G8 in L’Aquila, Italy.

It seems eerily fitting that they will gather at the scene of a devastating earthquake in April. The lives of millions of the world’s poorest have been devastated as well, by a tsunami of economic forces not of their making. We have all been affected by this very man-made crisis, but the poor bear the brunt.

Rising food and fuel costs, cataclysmic climate change and the global downturn have meant 100 million more have swollen the ranks of those who go to bed hungry to a record one billion.  And we may be about to add to their misery.

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